In June, 1844, Congress passed an act by virtue of which the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Arkansas was
vested with power to try offenses committed within the Indian
country.
In July, 1844, it was alleged that a murder was committed in
that country.
In April, 1845, an indictment was found by a grand jury in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Arkansas
against a person charged with committing the murder.
In March, 1851, Congress passed an act erecting nine of the
Western counties and the Indian country into a new judicial
district, directing the judge to hold two terms there, and giving
him jurisdiction of all causes, civil or criminal, except appeals
and writs of error, which are cognizable before a circuit court of
the United States.
The residue of the state remained a judicial district to be
styled the Eastern District of Arkansas.
This act of Congress did not take away the power and
jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Eastern District to try the indictment pending.
Page 56 U. S. 468
The two following questions were certified,
viz.:
1st. Did the act of Congress entitled "An act to divide the
District of Arkansas into two judicial districts," approved the
third day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
hundred and fifty-one, whereby the Western District of Arkansas was
created and defined, take away the power and jurisdiction of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Arkansas, so that it cannot proceed to hear, try, and determine a
prosecution for murder, pending against the prisoner, James L.
Dawson, a white man and not an Indian, upon an indictment found,
presented, and returned into the Circuit Court of the United States
for the District of Arkansas by the grand jury empanelled for that
district upon the 16th day of April, in the year of our Lord one
thousand eight hundred and forty-five, against said James L.
Dawson, a white man, for the felonious killing of Seaborn Hill,
another white man and not an Indian, on the eighth day of July,
A.D. 1844, in that country belonging to the Creek nation of
Indians, west of Arkansas, and which formed a part of the Indian
country annexed to the Judicial District of Arkansas by the Act of
Congress approved the seventeenth day of June, A.D. 1844, entitled
"An act supplementary to the act entitled
An act to regulate
trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, and to preserve peace
on the frontiers, passed thirtieth June, one thousand eight hundred
and thirty-four,'" in which cause, so pending, no trial has as yet
been had.
2d. Can the District Court of the United States for the Western
District of Arkansas take jurisdiction of the case aforesaid upon
the indictment aforesaid, so found in the year 1845, in said
Circuit Court for the District of Arkansas?
Although the name of Dawson only was mentioned in the question
certified, yet the record showed that Baylor was indicted at the
same as aiding and abetting in the murder.
A motion was made in the circuit court to quash the indictment
upon the ground that this Honorable Court has no jurisdiction or
power to hear, try, or determine this case and prosecution, and
that all its jurisdiction and power in that behalf ceased and was
extinguished on the third day of March, 1851, when that part of the
Indian country, in which the offense is charged to have been
committed, was severed from this district and made part of a new
district under the jurisdiction of the District Court of the United
States for the Western District of Arkansas.
It was upon this motion that the judges differed in opinion and
certified the two questions above stated to this Court.
Page 56 U. S. 484
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant was indicted in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Arkansas for the alleged murder of one
Seaborn Hill in the Indian country west of the State of
Arkansas.
The defendant is a white man, and so was Hill, the deceased.
At a circuit court held at the City of Little Rock, on the 28th
of April, 1853, the indictment came on for trial before the judges
of that court, whereupon a motion was made on behalf of the
defendant to quash the indictment, for want of jurisdiction of the
court to try the same.
And upon the argument, the judges being divided in opinion,
Page 56 U. S. 485
the following question was certified to this Court for its
decision.
1. Did the act of Congress entitled "An act to divide the
District of Arkansas into two judicial districts," approved the 3d
of March, 1851, by which the Western District of Arkansas was
created, take away the power and jurisdiction of the Circuit Court
of the United States for the Eastern District to try the indictment
pending against the prisoner, James L. Dawson, a white man, found
in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Arkansas, by a grand jury empanelled on the 16th April, 1845, for
feloniously killing Seaborn Hill a white man, on the 8th of July,
1844, in the country belonging to the Creek nation of Indians west
of Arkansas, and which formed a part of the Indian country annexed
to the Judicial District of Arkansas, by the Act of Congress
approved on the 17th of June, 1844, "An act supplementary to the
act entitled
An act to regulate trade and intercourse with
Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the frontiers,'" passed 30
June, 1834.
To state the question presented for our decision in a more
simple form, it is this: at the time the State of Arkansas composed
but one judicial district, in which the federal courts were held,
the Indian country lying west of the state was annexed to it for
the trial of crimes committed therein by persons other than
Indians. In this condition of the jurisdiction of these courts, the
crime in question was committed in the Indian country, and the
indictment found in the circuit court, at the April term, 1845,
while sitting at the City of Little Rock, the place of holding the
court.
Subsequent to this, the state was divided into two judicial
districts, the one called the Eastern, the other the Western
District of Arkansas. The Indian country was attached to and has
since belonged to the Western District. The question presented for
our decision is whether or not the circuit court for the Eastern
District is competent to try this indictment since change in the
arrangements of the districts.
By the 24th section of Act of Congress, June 30th, 1834, 4 Stat.
733, it was provided that all that part of the Indian country west
of the Mississippi River, bounded north by the northern boundary of
lands assigned to the Osage tribe of Indians, west by the Mexican
possessions, south by Red river, and east by the west line of the
Territory of Arkansas and State of Missouri, should be annexed to
the territorial government of Arkansas for the sole purpose of
carrying the several provisions of the act into effect. And the
25th section enacted that so much of the laws of the United States
as provides for the punishment of crimes committed within any place
within
Page 56 U. S. 486
the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, shall
be in force in the Indian country, provided the same shall not
extend to crimes committed by one Indian against the person or
property of another Indian.
The Act of Congress, June 7, 1844, 5 Stat. 680, which was
enacted after the Territory of Arkansas became a state, provided
that the courts of the United States for the District of the State
of Arkansas should be vested with the same power and jurisdiction
to punish crimes committed within the Indian country designated in
the 24th section of the act of 1834, and therein annexed to the
Territory of Arkansas, as were vested in the courts of the United
States for said territory before the same became a state, and that
for the sole purpose of carrying the act into effect, all that
Indian country theretofore annexed by said 24th section to the said
territory should be annexed to the State of Arkansas.
As we have already stated, the crime in question was committed
in this Indian country after it was annexed, for the purposes
stated, to the State of Arkansas, and the indictment was found in
the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Arkansas, which, we have seen, was coextensive with the state. And
if no change had taken place in the arrangement of the district
before the trial, there could, of course, have been no question as
to the jurisdiction of the court.
But by the Act of Congress, 3 March, 1851, it was provided that
the Counties of Benton and eight others enumerated, and all that
part of the Indian country annexed to the State of Arkansas for the
purposes stated, should constitute a new judicial district, to be
styled "The Western District of Arkansas," and the residue of said
state should be and remain a judicial district, to be styled "The
Eastern District of Arkansas."
The 2d section provides that the judge of the district court
should hold two terms of his court in this Western District in each
year at Van Buren, the county seat in Crawford County. And the
third confers upon him, in addition to the ordinary powers of a
district court, jurisdiction within the district of all causes,
civil or criminal, except appeals and writs of error, which are
cognizable before a circuit court of the United States. The fourth
provides for the appointment of a district attorney and marshal for
the district, and also for a clerk of the court.
It will be seen on a careful perusal of this act that it simply
erects a new judicial district out of nine of the western counties
in the state, together with the Indian country, and confers on the
district judge, besides the jurisdiction already possessed, circuit
court powers within the district, subject to the limitation as to
appeals and writs of error, leaving the powers and
Page 56 U. S. 487
jurisdiction of the circuit and district courts as they existed
in the remaining portion of the state, untouched. These remain and
continue within the district after the change, the same as before,
the only effect being to restrict the territory over which the
jurisdiction extends. Hence no provision is made as to the time or
place of holding the circuit or district courts in the district or
in respect to the officers of the courts, such as district
attorney, marshal, or clerk, or for organizing the courts for the
dispatch of their business. These are all provided for under the
old organization. 5 Stat. 50, 51, 176, 177, 178.
We do not, therefore, perceive any objection to the jurisdiction
of these courts over cases pending at the time the change took
place, civil and criminal, inasmuch as the erection of the new
district was not intended to affect it in respect to such cases,
nor has it, in our judgment, necessarily operated to deprive them
of it.
It has been supposed that a provision in the Sixth Amendment of
the Constitution of the United States has a bearing upon this
question, which provides, that
"In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right
to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and
district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which
district shall have been previously ascertained by law."
The argument is that, since the erection of the new district out
of the nine western counties in the state together with the Indian
country, it is not competent for the circuit court, in view of this
amendment, to try the prisoners within the remaining portion of the
old district, inasmuch as that amendment requires the district
within which the offense is committed and the trial is to be had
must be ascertained and fixed previous to the commission of the
offense.
But it will be seen from the words of this amendment that it
applies only to the case of offenses committed within the limits of
a state, and, whatever might be our conclusion if this offense had
been committed within the State of Arkansas, it is sufficient here
to say, so far as it respects the objection, that the offense was
committed out of its limit and within the Indian country.
The language of the amendment is too particular and specific to
leave any doubt about it:
"The accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial
by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime
shall be committed, which district shall have been previously
ascertained by law."
The only regulation in the Constitution, as it resects crimes
committed out of the limits of a state, is to be found in the 3d
art., sec. 2, of the Constitution, as follows:
"The trial of crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be
by jury, and such trial
Page 56 U. S. 488
shall be held in the state where the said crimes shall have been
committed; but when not committed within any state, the trial shall
be at such place or places as the Congress may by law have
directed."
Accordingly, in the first crimes act, passed April 30, 1790,
§ 8, 1 Stat. 114, it was provided that
"The trial of crimes committed on the high seas or in any place
out of the jurisdiction of any particular state shall be in the
district where the offender is apprehended or into which he may
first be brought."
A crime, therefore, committed against the laws of the United
States out of the limits of a state is not local, but may be tried
at such place as Congress shall designate by law.
This furnishes an answer to the argument against the
jurisdiction of the court as it respects venue, trial in the
county, and jury from the vicinage, as well as in respect to the
necessity of particular or fixed districts before the offense.
These considerations have no application or bearing upon the
question.
In this case, by the annexation of the Indian country to the
State of Arkansas, in pursuance of the act of 1844, for the
punishment of crimes committed in that country, the place of
indictment and trial was in the circuit court of the United States
for that state in which the indictment has been found and was
pending in 1851, when the Western District was set off, and as that
change did not affect the jurisdiction of the court as it respected
pending cases, but remained the same after the alteration of the
district as before, it follows that the trial of the indictment in
this Court will be at the place and in the court as prescribed by
law, which is all that is required in the case of an offense
committed out of the limits of a state.
We shall direct, therefore, an answer in the negative, to be
certified to the court below to the first question sent up for our
decision, as we are of opinion the court possesses jurisdiction to
hear and give judgment on the indictment.
The second question sent up in the division of opinion is as
follows:
"Can the District Court of the United States for the Western
District of Arkansas take jurisdiction of the case aforesaid upon
the indictment aforesaid, so found, in the year 1845, in said
circuit court for the District of Arkansas?"
As our conclusion upon the first question supersedes the
necessity of passing upon the second, it will be unnecessary to
examine it, and shall therefore confine our answer and certificate
to the court below to the first.
Page 56 U. S. 489
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN dissented.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN,
The facts and law of this case, as I understand them, have led
me to a different conclusion from that of a majority of the Court.
The twenty-fourth section of the Act of 30 June, 1834, after making
various provisions defining the limits of the Indian country and
imposing penalties for several offenses by white persons,
provides
"That for the sole purpose of carrying this act into effect, the
Indian country, bounded east by Arkansas and Missouri, west by
Mexico, north by the Osage country, and south by Red River, shall
be and hereby is annexed to the Territory of Arkansas."
On the 8th of July, 1844, a murder was committed at the Creek
agency, in the Creek country, west of Arkansas, for which the grand
jury found a bill of indictment in the circuit court of Arkansas,
at April term, 1845.
By an Act of March 3, 1851, it is provided
"That from and after the passage of this act, the Counties of
Benton, Washington, Crawford, Scott, Polk, Franklin, Johnson
Madison, and Carroll, and all that part of the Indian country lying
within the present Judicial District of Arkansas shall constitute a
new judicial district to be styled the Western District of
Arkansas, and the residue of said state shall be and remain a
judicial district to be styled the Eastern District of
Arkansas."
After the division of the district, Dawson, the defendant, was
arrested for the alleged murder, and the question whether the
Circuit Court of the United States sitting within the Eastern
District has jurisdiction to try the case has been referred to this
Court.
When the offense was committed and the indictment was found, the
District of Arkansas included the state and the Indian country
described, but when the defendant was arrested and the case was
called for trial, the district had been divided, and the question
is raised in the Eastern District, the murder having been committed
in the Western.
In the act dividing the district, Congress had power to provide
that all offenses committed in the district before the division
should be tried in the Eastern District. But no such provision
being made, the question is whether the jurisdiction may be
exercised in that district without it.
Since the division of the district, capital punishments have
been inflicted in the Western District for offenses committed
before the division. This deprived the accused of no rights which
they could claim under the Constitution of the United States or the
laws of the Union. The sixth article of the
Page 56 U. S. 490
amendment to the Constitution declares that
"In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right
to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the state and
district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which
district shall have been previously ascertained by law."
As the state and district are connected by the copulative
conjunction in this provision, the case before us is not
technically within it. The crime is alleged to have been committed
within the Indian country, which the district includes, but it is
not within the state. But the case appears to me to be within the
policy of the provision. Nine counties of the State of Arkansas are
within the district, and from which the jury to try the defendant
might be summoned. This brings the case substantially within the
above provision. Had the place of the murder been within one of the
above counties, the constitutional provisions must have governed
the case. All the rights guaranteed by the Constitution would have
been secured to the criminal by a trial in the Western District,
but those rights are not realized by him on a trial in the Eastern
District. And that is made the place of trial because the alleged
murder was not committed within the state.
In the 2d section of the 3d article of the Constitution, it is
declared that
"The trials of all crimes except in cases of impeachment shall
be by jury, and such trial shall be held in the state where the
said crimes shall have been committed; but when not committed
within any state, the trial shall be at such place or places as the
Congress may by law have directed."
The latter clause of this provision covers the case now before
us. The crime charged was not committed within any state, but it
was committed within a district within which such offenses are to
be tried as "directed by Congress." And there seems to me to be no
authority to try such an offender in any other district, or at any
other place. The act of 1834 provides that an offender, under the
act, when arrested, should be sent for trial to the district where
jurisdiction may be exercised.
The punishments inflicted in the Western District of Arkansas
for crimes committed before the division of the district were in
accordance with the above provision of the Constitution and the
principles of the common law, both of which are opposed to a trial
of the same offenses in the Eastern District. The tribunal is the
same in both districts, except the circuit judge may not be bound
to attend the Western District; but the Western District includes
the place of the crime, which, by the laws of England and of this
country, is the criterion of jurisdiction in criminal cases. This
is never departed from where the limits of the jurisdiction are
prescribed.
Page 56 U. S. 491
On what ground can jurisdiction be exercised in the Eastern
District? Not, I presume, on the ground that the crime was
committed before the district was divided. If this be assumed and
sustained, the capital punishments which have been inflicted in the
Western District for similar offenses have been without authority.
The offenders have been tried, and they have had, substantially,
the benefits secured by the Constitution. They have had a jury from
the district and as near the vicinage as practicable. These
privileges they would not have realized had they been tried in the
Eastern District. If tried in the Eastern District, the jury must
have been summoned from that district, and not from the district in
which the offense was committed. The considerations in favor of the
Western District as the legal place of trial greatly outweigh, it
seems to me, any that can arise in favor of the Eastern
District.
There is, however, a fact which may be supposed of great weight
in deciding the question, and that is the indictment was found
before the division of the district. I will examine this. It is
admitted the jurisdiction was in the circuit court for the entire
district, when the indictment was found. This gave jurisdiction,
but every step taken in the cause subsequent to the findings of the
bill is as much the exercise of jurisdiction as the finding of the
bill.
The establishment of the Western District in effect repealed the
jurisdiction of the Eastern District as to causes of action arising
in the Western District as fully as if the law had declared "no
jurisdiction shall hereafter be taken in any case, civil or
criminal, which is of a local character, and arises in the Western
District." Offenses committed in that district are made local by
the acts of Congress. This is not a case where, if jurisdiction
once attaches, the court may finally determine the matter. There
seems to me to be no reason for such a rule in a criminal case,
especially when it is opposed to the policy of the Constitution and
to the principles of common law.
A case lately decided in this Court may have some bearing on
this question. Under the fugitive slave law of 1793, certain
penalties were inflicted for aiding a fugitive from labor to
escape. A number of actions were brought in several of the states
-- in Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan -- for the recovery of this
penalty, but it was set up in defense that this penalty was
repealed by repugnant provisions in the law of 1850 on the same
subject, and this Court so held. The actions, which had been
pending for years, were stricken from the docket. But it may be
said the repeal, in the case stated, operated on the right of
action. This is admitted. And so, it may be said, the Western
District was repugnant to the Eastern so far as causes of
Page 56 U. S. 492
local actions arise in the Western District, and is not this
repugnancy as fatal to the trial as the repeal of the penalty in
the act of 1793?
All this difficulty arises from an omission of Congress to make,
in the law dividing the district, the necessary provision, and it
appears to me that we have no power, by construction or otherwise,
to supply the omission. This could not be done in an action of
ejectment. A writ of possession in such a case could not be issued
to the Western District on a judgment entered in the Eastern. And
if such a jurisdiction could not be sustained in a civil action,
much less could it be sustained in a criminal case.
If a person guilty of a crime in the Indian country before the
division could not be indicted and tried in the Eastern District,
it follows that the fact of the crime having been committed in the
Indian country can afford no ground of jurisdiction in the present
case. It must rest alone, then, it would seem, for jurisdiction, on
the ground that, the indictment having been found in the Eastern
District, the same jurisdiction may try the defendants, and, if
found guilty, sentence them to be executed. This view must overcome
the locality of the crime and the right which the defendants may
claim to have a jury as near the vicinage as practicable, at least
a jury from the district where the crime was committed. These
appear to me to be objections entitled to great consideration. A
jurisdiction in so important a case should not be maintained under
reasonable doubts of its legality.
The cases referred to in the argument to retain the jurisdiction
do not, as it appears to me, overcome the objections. Numerous
instances are cited where the territory of a judicial district has
been changed, provision being made in the act that the jurisdiction
should be continued where suits had been commenced. This shows the
necessity of such a provision, and is an argument against the
exercise of the jurisdiction where no provision has been made. And
in those cases, like the present, where a district has been changed
without any provision as to jurisdiction, there is no exercise of
it shown in a criminal case, especially where the punishment is
death.
Where jurisdiction attaches from the citizenship of the parties,
a change of residence does not affect the jurisdiction. The case of
Tyrell v.
Roundtree, 7 Pet. 464, seems to have no bearing
upon this question. That action was commenced by an attachment,
which was laid upon the land before the division of the county, and
this Court said the land remained in the custody of the officer
subject to the judgment of the court. An interest was vested in him
for the purposes of that judgment.
Page 56 U. S. 493
The judgment was not a general lien on it, but was a specific
appropriation of the property itself. And it said the division of
the county could not divest this vested interest or deprive the
officer of the power to finish a process, which was rightly
begun.
There may be cases where counties have been divided after
jurisdiction was taken in a local action, and the suit has been
carried into judgment, but such cases afford no authority in the
present case.
The case relied upon as in point in 4 Wash.C.C. 725, the court
said
"At the first or second session of this Court, which succeeded
the passage of the act of 1824, which added this and other counties
to the western judicial district, we were called upon to decide
whether the present action, together with some others then on our
docket for trial, together with the papers belonging to them,
should be sent to the Western District or retained here. After
hearing counsel on the question, the opinion of the court was that
those cases were not embraced either by the word or by the obvious
intention and policy of the act."
This does not appear to be a well considered case. The counties
were annexed to another jurisdiction, and yet the court speaks of
"the obvious intention and policy of the act," and on that ground
entertains jurisdiction over cases pending in the former district.
This was right in regard to transitory actions, but not where the
actions were of a local character.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern
District of Arkansas, and on the points or questions, on which the
judges of the said circuit court were opposed in opinion and which
were certified to this Court for its opinion, agreeably to the act
of Congress in such case made and provided, and was argued by
counsel. On consideration whereof it is the opinion of this Court
that the act of Congress entitled "An act to divide the District of
Arkansas into two judicial districts," approved the third day of
March in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and
fifty-one, whereby the Western District of Arkansas was created and
defined, did not take away the power and jurisdiction of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Arkansas, so that it can proceed to hear, try, and determine a
prosecution for murder, pending against the prisoner, James L.
Dawson, a white man and not an Indian, upon an indictment, found,
presented, and returned
Page 56 U. S. 494
into the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Arkansas by the grand jury empanelled for that district upon the
16th day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
hundred and forty-five, against said James L. Dawson, a white man,
for the felonious killing of Seaborn Hill, another white man and
not an Indian, on the eighth day of July, A.D. 1844, in that
county, belonging to the Creek nation of Indians, west of Arkansas,
and which formed a part of the Indian country annexed to the
Judicial District of Arkansas by the Act of Congress approved the
seventeenth day of June, A.D. 1844, entitled "An act supplementary
to the act entitled
An act to regulate trade and intercourse
with the Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the frontiers,
passed thirtieth June, one thousand eight hundred and
thirty-four,'" in which cause, so pending, no trial has yet been
had. And that this answer to the first question supersedes the
necessity of any answer to the second question.
Whereupon it is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court that
it be so certified to the said circuit court.